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int6klist(1)                                 Qualcomm Atheros Open Powerline Toolkit                                int6klist(1)

NAME
       int6klist - List Atheros Device Addresses

SYNOPSIS
       int6klist [options] [device] [device] [...]

DESCRIPTION
       print  the  local  device  address or all network device addresses for a specific device.  This program is ideal for that
       special script jokey in your life.  It only prints device addresses.  Nothing else.

       Devices are detected using one of two methods.  The two methods can be used in combination to determine network topology.

       The first method sends one VS_SW_VER message to the Qualcomm Atheros Local Management Address  and  prints  the  Ethernet
       source  address  found  in each received confirmation message.  The method is used when no device addresses appear on the
       command line.  The result is a list of all local devices, being this connected directly to the local  host.   Each  local
       device device may bridge to an independent powerline network having remote devices as members.

       The  second  method sends one VS_NW_INFO message to each specified device and prints the Ethernet source address found in
       each received message plus the Ethernet addresses of each network station identified in that message body.   This  method
       is  used  whenever  one,  or more, device addresses appear on the command line.  It is possible to query remote powerline
       devices directly and so duplicate devices addresses are printed when devices share powerline neighbors.

       This program is part of the Qualcomm Atheros Powerline Toolkit.  See the plc man page for an  overview  and  installation
       instructions.

OPTIONS
       -b     Print  bridge  device  addresses.  Each specified device reports it's own address. This option has no effect if no
              devices are specified.

       -i     Select the host Ethernet interface. All requests are sent via this host interface and only reponses  received  via
              this  host interface are recognized. The default interface is eth1 because most people use eth0 as their principle
              network connection; however, if environment string &quot;PLC&quot; is defined then it  takes  precedence  over  the  default
              interface. This option then takes precedence over either default.

       -n     Append a newline to output.

       -q     Enter quiet mode. This option has no effect at this time.

       -r     Print  remote device addresses. Each specified device reports neighbor device addresses. This option has no effect
              when no devices are speceified.

       -s     Insert a newline, instead of a space, between each device address.

       -v     Enter verbose mode. All Etherenet frames sent or received by the program are displayed on stdout.

       -?, --help
              Print program help summary on stdout. This option takes precedence over other options on the command line.

       -!, --version
              Print program version information on stdout. This option takes precedence over other options on the command  line.
              Use  this option when sending screen dumps to Atheros Technical Support so that they know exactly which version of
              the Linux Toolkit you are using.

ARGUMENTS
       device The MAC address of some powerline device. More than one address may be specified. If omitted the the program  out‐
              put  consists  of local device addresses only. Otherwise, output conisists of the specified device followed by all
              devices associated with it. The default address is local.  See  DEVICES  for  information  about  symbolic  device
              addresses.

DEVICES
       Powerline  devices use Ethernet Media Access Control (MAC) addresses. A MAC address is a 48-bit value entered as 12 hexa‐
       decimal digits in upper, lower or mixed character case. Octets may be separated with colons  for  clarity.  For  example,
       &quot;00b052000001&quot;, &quot;00:b0:52:00:00:01&quot; and &quot;00b052:000001&quot; are valid and equivalent.

       The following MAC addresses are special and may be entered by name instead of number.

       all    Same as &quot;broadcast&quot;.

       broadcast
              A  synonym  for  the  Ethernet broadcast address, FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF. All devices, whether local, remote or foreign
              recognize messages sent to this address.  A remote device is any device at the far end of a powerline  connection.
              A foreign device is any device not manufactured by Atheros.

       local  A  synonym  for  the Qualcomm Atheros vendor specific Local Management Address (LMA), 00:B0:52:00:00:01. All local
              Atheros devices recognize this address but remote and foreign devices do not. A remote device is any device at the
              far end of a powerline connection. A foreign device is any device not manufactured by Atheros.

REFERENCES
       See the Qualcomm Atheros HomePlug AV Firmware Technical Reference Manual for more information.

DISCLAIMER
       Atheros  HomePlug  AV  Vendor Specific Management Message Entry structure and content is proprietary to Qualcomm Atheros,
       Ocala FL USA. Consequently, public information may not be available. Qualcomm Atheros reserves the right to  modify  mes‐
       sage  structure and content in future firmware releases without any obligation to notify or compensate users of this pro‐
       gram.

EXAMPLES
       The following command lists all local devices because no device was specified. Because no devices are  specified  on  the
       command  line,  a VS_SW_VER message is sent to 00:B0:52:00:00:01 and device responses are collected. As we can see, there
       is only one local device available at this time. Observe that the prompt appears immediately after  the  address  because
       newlines are omitted by default.

          # int6klist
          00:B0:52:BE:EF:04 #

       The next examples do the same thing but this time there are several local devicer available.

          # int6klist
          00:B0:52:BE:EF:04 00:B0:52:BA:BE:02 00:B0:52:BA:BE:01 # int6k

       The  next  example  queries  the  first  local  device  from the previous example, 00:B0:52:BE:EF:04, for a list neighbor
       devices. This time a VS_NW_INFO message is sent because we named a device on the command line. The named  device  happens
       to be a local device but it need not be. We can see that the device has no neighbors.

          # int6klist 00:B0:52:BE:EF:04
          00:B0:52:BE:EF:04 # int6k

       The next example we query the next ocal device, 00:B0:52:BA:BE:02, and find that it has two neighbor devices that did not
       show up earlier because they are remote devices. Observe that the three devices comprise  a  complete  logical  powerline
       network.  Device  00:B0:52:BA:BE:02  is  connected to the local host but 00:0F:33:F2:01:21 and 00:0f:00:F2:01:13 are con‐
       nected to other hosts, somewhere.

          # int6klist 00:B0:52:BA:BE:02
          00:B0:52:BA:BE:02 00:0F:33:F2:01:21 00:0F:00:F2:01:13

       The next example shows that we can query multiple devices at a time for neighbors. We have copied  the  output  from  the
       second example and pasted it onto the command line. We now have a list of all devices, local and remote.

          # int6klist 00:B0:52:BE:EF:04 00:B0:52:BA:BE:02 00:B0:52:BA:BE:01
          00:B0:52:BE:EF:04 00:B0:52:BA:BE:01 00:B0:52:BA:BE:02 00:0F:33:F2:01:21 00:0F:00:F2:01:13

       This  next  example does the same thing but uses option -n to append a newline after each query. This output is eaiser to
       understand because each device queried starts on a new line and is followed by any neighbors.

          # int6klist 00:B0:52:BE:EF:04 00:B0:52:BA:BE:02 00:B0:52:BA:BE:01 -n
          00:B0:52:BE:EF:04
          00:B0:52:BA:BE:02 00:0F:33:F2:01:21 00:0F:00:F2:01:13
          00:B0:52:BA:BE:01

       This example invokes int6klist which returns a list of local devices. That list is inserted into another  int6klist  com‐
       mand line. This demontrates how program output can be used in scripts.

          # int6klist $(int6klist) -n
          00:B0:52:BE:EF:04
          00:B0:52:BA:BE:02 00:0F:33:F2:01:21 00:0F:00:F2:01:13
          00:B0:52:BA:BE:01

       This next example accomplishes the same thing since all local device respond with a list of powerline neighbors.

          # int6klist local
          00:B0:52:BE:EF:04
          00:B0:52:BA:BE:02 00:0F:33:F2:01:21 00:0F:00:F2:01:13
          00:B0:52:BA:BE:01

SEE ALSO
       plc(1), int6krate(1), int6krule(1), int6ktone(1)

CREDITS
        Charles Maier &lt;cmaier@qca.qualcomm.com&gt;

open-plc-utils-0.0.3                                        Mar 2014                                                int6klist(1)
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